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Working with Injured Athletes: Integrating Psychology into your - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Working with Injured Athletes: Integrating Psychology into your Practice Frances Flint, PhD, CAT(C), ATC York University Toronto, Canada But I have to play! Integrating Psychology into your Practice Psychological tools in your


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Working with Injured Athletes: Integrating Psychology into your Practice

Frances Flint, PhD, CAT(C), ATC York University – Toronto, Canada

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But I have to play!

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Integrating Psychology into your Practice

  • Psychological tools in your practice
  • Musculoskeletal and concussion

injuries – differences for the athlete

  • Head injury in sport – a new

challenge

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Integrated Rehabilitation

“I’m 100 per cent physically. I just need to get the race head back.” Factors:

  • Physical
  • Psychological
  • Sport
  • K. Gillespie. Serwa on course in comeback. Toronto Star. Sunday December 9, 2012. p.

S3.

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Whole person approach

Injured athletes do not become their injuries… See the person who has the injury – not just the injury.

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Pre-injury Status

  • Physical condition
  • Sport factors
  • Social factors
  • Psychological/Emotional
  • Goals
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Pre-injury Status

Fit - “on top of the world” – Olympic Champion - in control

  • dominant -

independent

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Post-injury Status

  • Physical factors
  • Social factors
  • Sport factors
  • Psychological/ Emotional factors
  • Goals
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Psychological Reactions to Sport Injury

Athletes are individual and reactions to sport injury vary according to the athlete’s situation and the environment

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Psychological Reactions To Sport Injury

What should we consider when working with injured athletes?

  • The individuality of each athlete
  • What is normal for athletes
  • The injury scenario
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So what are athletes telling us?

  • Mind-body

dissociation

  • Loss of control
  • Need to know

(process and

  • utcome)
  • Sense of identity
  • Sense of belonging
  • It is not fair!
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Elite Level Football Player “My body had never been a barrier to me before.”

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Dennis Byrd

“It wasn’t a lack of effort holding me back. It was just that my body simply was not doing what I was willing it to do. That was

  • frustrating. It drove me crazy. My

body had never been a barrier before.”

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Female Elite Level Basketball Player

Her first injury was: torn ACL, PCL, medial meniscus, lateral meniscus, MCL, LCL, and posterior capsule.

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Female Elite Level Basketball Player

“I couldn’t believe that it was my own body letting me down.”

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Negative Thought Patterns

  • 1. Blaming (self or others)
  • 2. “Should” statements
  • 3. Polarized thinking
  • 4. Catastrophizing
  • 5. Control fallacies
  • 6. Emotional reasoning
  • 7. Filtering
  • 8. Entitlement fallacies
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Keys for Recognizing and Integrating Psychological Factors in Your Practice

  • Listen to the athlete
  • Consider the situational factors influencing athletes
  • Recognize the pressures to compete
  • Help the athlete gain a sense of control over the

situation

  • Help the athlete maintain a sense of belonging

through meaningful team contact if appropriate

  • Provide both procedural and outcome information to

the athlete

  • Use an integrated approach to sport injury

rehabilitation (physical, psychological, and sport factors)

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Brief or Extensive Interventions

Deciding:

  • Can a strategy be added to my treatment with

the athlete (brief intervention)?

  • Can this be done without adding time to the

treatment?

  • Can this be done with the knowledge base

that I now have?

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Brief or Extensive Interventions

Possible brief interventions:

  • Goal setting
  • Education
  • Counselling
  • Visualizations
  • Brief relaxation (centering, focus, breathing)
  • Modeling
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Education and Counselling

  • Easy technique to use
  • Research suggests this

is an important aspect helping the athlete recover

  • Information is ‘old’ to

you but new to a first time injured athlete

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Brief or Extensive Interventions

Deciding:

  • Need to recognize the athlete’s situation before

and after the injury.

  • Must evaluate what the problem areas are.
  • Does this athlete need an extensive intervention?
  • Who can provide the interventions.
  • How can this extensive intervention be added to

the treatment of the athlete?

  • Must ensure a collaborative approach to

treatment and eventually discharge.

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Brief or Extensive Interventions

Possible extensive interventions:

  • Counselling and Education
  • Macro goal setting
  • Relaxation
  • Thought stoppage
  • Goal Setting
  • Modeling
  • Visualization
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Psychological Tools in your Practice

  • Whole person approach (physical,

psychological, sport)

  • Observation and recognition
  • Communication
  • Visualizations
  • Goal setting
  • Modeling
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Observation and Recognition

  • Recognizing changes in an athlete’s

behaviour and demeanour

  • Recognizing warning signs of

depersonalization

  • Recognizing warning signs of depression
  • Hear what the athlete is saying,

particularly hurtful ideation and actions

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Communication

What is scary about open lines of communication? We are often frightened that someone will actually reveal something personal to us and we will have to respond!!!

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Goal Setting

Set goals for all aspects of recovery: –Physical rehabilitation (swelling, range

  • f motion)

–Psychological aspects (sense of control) –Sport factors (keep up with the team or improve skills – still need to be ‘game fit’)

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Goal Setting

S M A R T E R Specific Measureable Applicable to needs Realistic Timelines Evaluate Re-establish goals

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Modeling

Modeling is an excellent technique to help injured athletes believe recovery is possible.

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A Comparison of Psychological Implications of Musculoskeletal Injury Rehabilitation and Concussion Recovery

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Comparing Musculoskeletal Sport Injury with Concussions

Very clear acute physiological reactions to musculoskeletal sport injury – body part specific

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Comparing Musculoskeletal Sport Injury with Concussions

Very specific phases of physiological healing and rehabilitation

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Comparing Musculoskeletal Sport Injury with Concussions

  • Musculoskeletal injury – treat the injury and

then if necessary, recondition the entire body

  • Concussion – is a systemic injury since it

affects the whole body

  • Concussion – seems to be significant overlap

with symptoms of depression, anxiety, insomnia and personality change

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Comparing Musculoskeletal and Sport Concussion Injuries - Psychological

Musculoskeletal

  • “Red Badge of Courage”
  • Typical advice – keep athlete

involved with sport

  • Can establish goals for

rehabilitation based on physiological stages of healing

  • Can provide injury-specific

activity

  • Fairly established timelines for

return to play provides hope Sport Concussion

  • No visible injury thus no

“excuse” for not playing

  • Concerns about keeping

athlete involved with sport

  • Can not establish set goals

based on physiological stages

  • f healing
  • Inactivity cause for frustration
  • No established timelines for

return, thus more frustration

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What do Athletes Tell Us?

  • “I can’t stand watching the team I love

playing”.

  • “Once I got back to the field, it was 10 times

worse because I was in a place where most of us feel most comfortable and I couldn’t participate…I didn’t know how I was going to go on…watching these guys …running and doing drills and everything and I’m not a part

  • f it…”
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What do Athletes Tell Us?

  • “My teammates were the ones who

noticed that something was wrong”.

  • “The more you think about whether your

head is going to hurt today, the more chance it will”.

  • “For two and a half years, my head felt

like a basketball that was over-inflated”.

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What do Athletes Tell Us About Concussions?

  • Mind-body dissociation is quite common with

musculoskeletal sport injury – concussions?

  • Extreme frustration especially with setbacks –

no guidelines – trial and error approach to RTP

  • Models are available in musculoskeletal injury

– concussion models?

  • Loss of control with concussion
  • Need to know (process and outcome)
  • Sense of identity
  • Sense of belonging
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How Can We Help Injured Athletes Recover From Concussion?

  • Recognize concussion

signs, symptoms and severity

  • Refer to appropriate

specialists

  • Recognize their

psychological state

  • Reaffirm your support

for their recovery

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How can we help injured athletes recover from concussion?

  • Remember their pre-injury

status (fit, in control, dominant, independent)

  • Involve athletes in the

recovery process – help with a sense of control

  • Provide some tangible ideas
  • r protocols on things that the

athlete can control

  • Remember that rest means

physical and cognitive aspects

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Concussion – a new psychological challenge Challenges ahead:

  • Parents and athletes questioning

sport involvement

  • Rule and equipment changes
  • Attitude changes
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Sport Psychology and Working with Injured Athletes

  • Listen
  • Communicate
  • Educate
  • Integrate
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Integrate psychological approaches and techniques into your everyday practice.

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